Extinction risk rises for cod, other species

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Atlantic cod, a type of bumble bee and a pair of fish should be added to Canada's list of endangered species, according to a federal committee that tracks hundreds of wildlife species at risk in the country.

Decades of unsustainable harvesting have depleted Canada's cod populations, three of which have declined 90 per cent or more since the 1960s, according to a spring report by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.

Scientists have been assessing Atlantic cod stocks since 1998, and they're at their lowest levels in Canadian history.

"There are populations that are continuing to decline in the absence of fishing and that's mainly because we had previously knocked the populations down so far that other factors in the ecosystems are taking over," said Jeff Hutchings, the committee chair.

Federal Fisheries Minister Gail Shea said she wanted to read the report before commenting.

But Liberal fisheries critic Gerry Byrne said he was skeptical of the new assessment, saying fishermen often have a different view.

The committee, which met last month to assess 51 species at risk, also said the rusty-patched bumble bee should be listed as endangered. Its rapid decline remains a mystery, but some contributing factors could be pesticides, disease and a loss of habitat, the committee said.

Other species that should be listed on the endangered species list include:

The committee said global warming is a contributing factor to the loss of habitat for the flammulated owl, which depends on the mature coniferous forests of B.C.'s Interior. The small bird was assessed as a special concern.

The committee's report had some good news. The whooping crane, which breeds in Alberta, has come back from the brink of extinction. In 1938, there were 14 birds and there are now no fewer than 250.